Akashian general election, 2010

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Akashian general election, 2010

← 2006 26 June 2010 2014 →

400 seats in the National Assembly
201 seats needed for a majority
Turnout90,2%
  First party Second party Third party
  KōkoKaga-small.jpg RiseTakashima(small).jpg
Leader Kōko Kaga Rise Takashima Hiroshi Sone
Party SP CP MPP
Last election 32 seats
7,7% PR
8,5% STV
48 seats
12,4% PR
11,0% STV
122 seats
27,1% PR
25,8% STV
Seats won 210 50 36
Seat change Increase 178 Increase 2 Decrease 86
PR vote 2.953.606 1.120.855 802.775
% and swing 39,0%
Increase 31,3%
14,8%
Increase 2,4%
19,6%
Decrease 16,5%
STV vote 3.233.400 888.046 781.784
% and swing 42,6%
Increase 34,3%
11,7%
Increase 0,7%
10,3%
Decrease 15,5%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Kimie Hatano.jpg LianaFerrari(small).jpg
Leader Yumi Morino Kazunori Takata Liana Ferrari
Party FP GP URP
Last election 20 seats
6,2% PR
7,8% STV
26 seats
6,5% PR
8,0% STV
121 seats
26,9% PR
25,4% STV
Seats won 27 25 21
Seat change Increase 7 Decrease 1 Decrease 100
PR vote 643.735 583.148 568.001
% and swing 8,5%
Increase 2,3%
7,7%
Increase 1,2%
7,5%
Decrease 19,4%
STV vote 622.391 599.621 561.670
% and swing 8,2%
Increase 0,4%
7,9%
Decrease 0,1%
7,4%
Decrease 18,0%

Akashi-election-president-2005.png
Most voted party by province

Prime Minister before election

Anna Carbone
MPP

Prime Minister after election

Kōko Kaga
SP

A general election was held in Akashi on 26 June 2010. Kōko Kaga led the Socialist Party to a landslide victory, winning the first single-party majority since 1970. It was the second election nicknamed the "red wave" (Miranian: 赤い波 akai nami) after 1990.

Having been humiliated four years before and facing poor opinion polls, the Socialists elected Kōko leader only a month before the election. This proved to be a masterstroke: Kōko's youth and charisma helped drive a surge in the party's popularity. She enjoyed high-profile support from young voters and the entertainment industry, an overlap dubbed "Scandal voters".

"Kōkomania" caught the centre-right incuments on the wrong foot. The Moderate People's Party's new leader Hiroshi Sone proved less appealing than the retiring Anna Carbone. Liana Ferrari suffered especially badly, forced on the defensive after four years of setting herself up as the next Prime Minister and believing Akashi's electorate now had a "permanent centre-right majority" — an idea inspired by the writings of Róisín Ní Bradáin that went down poorly with voters.

While frustrated by the Socialist surge overshadowing her campaign, Communist Party leader Rise Takashima cannily responded to the transformed campaign by urging voters to launch "a new leftist decade". She concentrated her fire on the conservative parties, playing down the Communist–Socialist rivalry.

Results

General election, 26 June 2010
Akashi-election-gen-2010.svg
Party Party list Constituency Total
seats
+/-
PR % +/− STV % +/−
Socialist Party 2.953.606 39,0% +31,3% 3.233.400 42,6% +34,3% 210 +178
Communist Party 1.120.855 14,8% +2,4% 888.046 11,7% +0,7% 50 +2
Moderate People's Party 802.775 10,6% -16,5% 781.784 10,3% -15,5% 36 -86
Future Party 643.735 8,5% +2,3% 622.391 8,2% +0,4% 27 +7
Green Party 583.148 7,7% +1,2% 599.621 7,9% -0,1% 25 -1
United Reform Party 568.001 7,5% -19,4% 561.670 7,4% -18,0% 21 -100
National Cooperative Party 492.268 6,5% +0,9% 508.539 6,7% +0,5% 20 -1
National Union 136.320 1,8% -0,4% 151.803 2,0% -0,5% 5 ±0
Conservative National Party 90.880 1,2% -0,7% 53.131 0,7% -0,8% 0 ±0
Akashi Renewal Party 83.307 1,1% -0,7% 60.721 0,8% -0,8% 0 ±0
Independents 98.454 1,3% -0,4% 129.032 1,7% -0,2% 6 +1
Total 7.573.348 100% 7.590.140 100% 400
Registered voters and turnout 8.396.173 90,2% 8.396.173 90,4%
Bloc strength
Bloc Parties Seats
Crimson bloc CP, GP 75
Pale crimson bloc SP, NU 215
Light yellow bloc NCP, FP 47
Light blue bloc MPP, URP 57
Dark blue bloc CNP, ARP 0

The SP surpassed all expectations and won a single-party majority for the first time since 1970. They gained swings of over 30% of the vote and swept all provinces, managing to finish first even in communist-leaning Kobi and conservative-leaning Takao.

Most of the leftist gains came at the expense of the conservatives. The MPP lost 15–16% of the vote and 86 seats, falling to third place for the first time in its existence. The centre-left voters Liana had managed to woo in 2006 deserted the URP, which suffered a greater defeat, losing 18–19% of its vote and 100 seats. Liana had mistaken a temporary victory caused by previous SP turmoil for a permanent realignment.

The smaller parties emerged comparatively unscathed by the left–right competition. The CP gained 2 seats, making it the official opposition. The FP gained 7 seats, a notably good result for leader Yumi Morino amid the excitement of "Kōkomania". The GP and NCP both lost one seat.

Kōko formed a single-party SP government, and took advantage of its majority to quickly pass flagship reforms for its "21st century socialism" program, which included constitutional amendments approved by referendum the next year.